May 9, 2011

Way to go and more— Americans of Philippine descent in Hawaii

Jun Colmenares

Charlene Cuaresma

Mila Kaahanui

Ruth Mabanglo

Raymund Liongson

BY: Fil-Am Observer Staff

The current crop of appointees to the Abercrombie administration, appointments that have been approved by the state’s Senate, is an indication of the commitment to give voice to the people of the Philippines who have come to Hawaii and the United States and call this country their own homeland.

It is also an act of recognition of what the people of Philippine descent in the state can to the various groups making up the state’s demographics.

Two of the appointees are executive directors of two important offices, the Office of Language Access and the Office of Community Services, both under the

Department of the Labor and Industrial Relations; both have come all the way from the Philippine homeland to establish a life in these islands.

Mila Medallion Kaahanui has been serving as the executive director of the Office

of Community Services early this year. A veteran of the political life of the state, she has retired but was asked to return to public service.

Jun Colmenares resumed his post as executive director of the Office of Language Access, a job he has held since being appointed to the position by then Gov. Linda Lingle in 2007.

RaymundLiongson has been appointed member—as a volunteer commissioner—of the Hawaii Civil Rights Commission.

Ruth ElyniaMabanglo has been appointed member of the advisory council of the

Office of Language Access.

Charlene Cuaresma has been appointed member of the Board of Education, a

policy-making body of the Department of Education.

Both Liongson and Mabanglo will serve until 2015 while, while Cuaresma will

serve until 2013.

This development in the political life of the state signals a new confidence in the capability and confidence of the state government of the people of Philippine descent in the state.

While the immigrant Filipinos have produced a governor in the Ben Cayetano,

their participation in the political process including their inclusion in the actual decision-making processes relative to governance has been uneven.

An improvement in this political participation is urgent.

With at least five Filipinos in some of the crucial areas that have impact on

the lives of the people of Philippine descent, the future looks bright to other

ethnic groups in the state.

Of the five newly appointed professionals, four of them are naturalized; only

Cuaresma is born in Hawaii.

Kaahanui came to Hawaii armed with a college degree from the University of the

Philippines; she went on to the University of Hawaii to finish a master’s degree

in social work, and from then on worked to improve the lives of health care

workers and health care providers as a social worker.

Before her appointment to the OCS, Kaahanui was president of the Filipino

Coalition for Solidarity, a cause-oriented, non-government group of Filipinos

engaged in social activism.

Both Cuaresma and Liongson had been president of FCS at one time.

Cuaresma, who holds a master’s in public from the University of Hawaii, has been in the forefront of public health education; she has served in various capacities at the Asian-American Network for Cancer Awareness and Research,

including her current position as community director.

Mabanglo, who holds a doctorate from the ManuelL.QuezonUniversity in the

Philippines, is a professor of the University of Hawaii’s Indo-Pacific Languages

and Literatures Department; she has been in the forefront of Philippine heritage

education in this state.

Liongson, also a professor of the University of Hawaii’s LeewardCommunity

College, holds a doctorate in philosophy from the University of the Philippines.

He has been in the forefront of various issues and concerns in Hawaii including

labor union and economic development, domestic violence, and international and

heritage education.

Colmenares holds a master’s and a doctor’s degree in political science from the

University of Delhi, and a master’s in public health from the University of Hawaii. He has served OLA as its director since 2007.

With these competence professionals of Philippine descent being involved more

and more in policy-making and in the running of the everyday operations of their

respective offices, we see here a better inclusion and representation of Filipinos in this state.

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New Hours for County Immigrant Services

WAILUKU – Effective April 1st, the County of Maui Immigrant Services Division announced its new office hours.
In addition, the division will be re-opening its Lahaina office starting this month.
The new hours for the following offices are:
Wailuku
Monday-Thursday 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Friday 8:00 a.m. to Noon
Molokai
Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Lanai
Monday and Wednesday 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Friday 8:00 am-12:00 noon
Lahaina
First Thursday of every month from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
For more information call 270-7791.